![]() Recyclable Packaging Made from materials that can easily be recycled if disposed of correctly. This is not a Toy This product is not intended for children, and has not been classified as a toy. Specifies allowed limits of lead, cadmium, mercury, hexavalent chromium, polybrominated biphenyls (PBB) and polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDE). Minimises the environmental impact of waste electrical and electronic equipment (WEEE) by reducing the quantities of four heavy metals and two brominated flame retardants. RoHS Restriction of Hazardous Substances. Alternatively, in some countries return items to your local retailer upon the purchase of an equivalent new product. For the product’s after life, please take it to designated collection points, where they will be accepted free of charge. WEEE Waste Electrical & Electronic Equipment Directive reduces the amount of electrical and electronic equipment being produced and encourages reuse and recycling. Carpeted and capable of movement on its own? I'd find bits of it scattered all over, probably by stepping on them.CE Mark Meets health, safety and environmental protection requirements of EU directives. Its life expectancy would be measurable in minutes. Bliss.Clocky, Clocky would just be asking for it. The scent, the sound, the knowledge that I'll soon be blessed by that life giving elixir, the relief I feel that the peacefully slumbering cat curled somewhere near my legs won't be shredding them as she tears toward some offending noise maker. I am consistenly amazed at the force a ten pound cat can generate when she hits something at a dead run.These days, I'm woken by the coffee maker. Once, it was because she sent it in careening into my forehead. Other times it's because she's rammed it into the wall with enough force to break it. Sometimes this was because she's managed to get the snooze button. She'd jump about three feet straight up every morning, land, and promptly attack the thing until it stopped making noise. In a room that I can reach the wall in any direction in under two steps.This would be an annoying, unhelpful solution.īack when I had alarm clocks, I hated them, but not nearly as much as my cat did. This would be a good thing.I would not like: 1) A gimmicky alarm clock that 'runs' away from me. Someone with time-inconsistent preferences should be: O paid to use Clocky. ![]() When the alarm goes off again, Clocky will be hiding somewhere on the opposite side of your bedroom, so that you are forced to get out of bed to turn off the alarm. Waiting for the water to adjust to a nice temperature is annoying, and getting in a running shower is less resistance than having to start one running in a cold room.Combined, they would make waking and getting up a better option than staying in bed. Clocky M is an alarm clock that rolls off your bedside table and runs away when you hit the snooze button. ![]() The minimum amount of stuff-to-do in the morning.6) It would turn on the shower/fill the bath with warm water. No wakeup moment of confusion as you think you are late for everything all at once, or think it's a weekend.5) There would be a teas-made brewing tea or coffee, or some other pre-set breakfast arrangement, even if it was me setting it the night before. You are not late, your reminder from yourself last night is.". It would say "Good morning, Today is a Tuesday, it is eight o clock and you are due in at work at 9. No shock panic wakeup, no audio discomfort.4) An announcement (electronic) telling me all the things I really need to know in the morning before my brain has switched on. Before the required wakeup time, the windows would close, the heating would come on.2) A gentle brightening of the lights (quietly, no buzzing) as an artificial sunrise (no eye discomfort).3) A gentle alarm (no harsh loud BBBBRRRRIIIIINNNNGGGGGGGGGG!!!!) with increasing volume. I would like:1) A room warm enough that there's no chill involved in getting out of bed. ![]()
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